From the BBC:
“Spain's embattled ex-King Juan
Carlos to leave country”
Spain's former king Juan Carlos
will leave the country, the royal palace has announced, weeks after he was
linked to an inquiry into alleged corruption. Juan Carlos, 82, made the announcement
in a letter to his son, Felipe, to whom he handed power six years ago. He said
he would be available if prosecutors needed to interview him. In June, Spain's
Supreme Court opened an investigation into the alleged involvement of Juan
Carlos in a high-speed rail contract in Saudi Arabia. It was not immediately
clear when the former monarch would leave Spain and where he would reside. It
is a humiliating exit for a king who had seemed set to go down in history as
the leader who skilfully guided Spain from dictatorship to democracy after the
death of General Franco in 1975, the BBC's Nick Beake says. Juan Carlos abdicated
in 2014 after nearly 40 years as king following a corruption investigation
involving his daughter's husband and a controversial elephant hunting trip the
monarch took during Spain's financial crisis.
What did the letter say? In the letter, the former monarch wrote that
he was making the decision "in the face of the public repercussions that
certain past events in my private life are generating" and in the hope of
allowing his son to carry out his functions as king with "tranquillity".
"Guided by the conviction to best serve the people of Spain, its
institutions, and you as king, I inform you of my decision at this time to
leave Spain. "A decision I make with deep emotion but with great
serenity," the letter said. The statement from the Zarzuela palace said
that King Felipe VI had conveyed "his heartfelt respect and
gratitude" to his father for this decision. In March, King Felipe VI
renounced the inheritance of his father. The royal palace also said at the time
that Juan Carlos would stop receiving an annual grant of €194,000 ($228,000;
£174,520).
What is the corruption
investigation about? Spain's Supreme
Court has said it aims to establish Juan Carlos's connection with the Saudi
project after his abdication in June 2014. At that point he lost his immunity
from prosecution. Spanish firms won a €6.7bn (£6bn) deal to build a
Mecca-Medina rail link. Spanish anti-corruption officials suspect that the
former king kept some undeclared funds in Switzerland, and a Swiss
investigation is under way. The Spanish government has said that "justice
is equal for all" and it would "not interfere" in the inquiry.
King Juan Carlos Born in Rome, Italy, in 1938. Ascends the
throne on 22 November 1975, two days after the death of fascist dictator Gen
Francisco Franco. Juan Carlos was widely admired for steering Spain to
democracy during a difficult period. But towards the end of his 39-year reign
he drew growing criticism. Abdicates on 18 June 2014 in favour of his son
Felipe
^ The former Spanish King was born in exile in Italy, returned to Spain where he was groomed by Franco's Dictatorship, led Spain into so-called Democracy - by making it illegal, under the Pact of Forgetting, to talk about or deal with what Franco did to the millions of innocent Spaniards from the 1930s-1975 - and it seems he will now doe in exile (although this time because of his corruption.) ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-53642283
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